Sunday, October 18, 2020

Jewel # 420 (Oct. 16, 2020)

 

Red-Eyed                        Cuban Tree Frog                             
Spatulate Nose Tree Frog

"And they shall be Mine, saith the Lord of Hosts, in that day when I
make up MY JEWELS.”
Malachi 3:17

To my dear Grandchildren

Unusual Tree Frogs

God created great whales, and every living creatures that moves.  Genesis 1:21

There are so many varieties of frogs and toads throughout the word that it would take volumes of books to tell about all of them.  Among them are several hundred kinds of tree frogs.  They live mostly in North Central and South America and Australia.  Their sizes range from less than an inch to four or five inches long, and they all eat insects.

One of these is named “red eyed.”  If you saw its huge, bulging eyes with their coal-black pupils, you would agree it was well-named.  In contrast to its red eyes, it is green over its back and the front of its legs.  It has nimble feet with three toes and a blue spotted yellow stomach.  A close relative has similar eyes and a green back, but the stomach and sides are orange and white.  Its legs are a combination of green, yellow and red, with  long, deep-orange toes.

Another odd fellow is the Cuban tree frog, which is a drab tan colour with huge speckled eyes and coal-black pupils.  Its wide mouth seems to be in a perpetual grin, but also suggests an ability to make a meal of a smaller frog.

A very unusual one in Central America has the long name spatulate nose tree frog.  A dark brown top and legs are mixed with darker brown speckles and a gray-white stomach.  It gets its name because an upper part of its lips protrude way beyond the mouth itself.  (Spatulate means “knife-like.”)  Perhaps the Creator arranged it that way to help it reach into narrow spots where insects are often found.

While tree frogs will at times visit ponds or streams looking for food they are called tree frogs because they spend much of their lives in trees.  Some live in the very tops of giant trees and never come down.  Their bony feet have sticky pads that never fail to grip the branches tightly.  Some have been seen clinging to big leaves and playfully swinging in the wind.  Tree frogs usually choose trees that have large, smooth, cup-shaped leaves holding rainwater, in which the female lays hundreds of eggs.  If one leaf is not big enough for her, she joins two or three together, making a larger home for the little tadpoles when they hatch.  Some tree frogs lay their eggs in ponds.

Did the Lord God actually create these unusual little creatures?  Indeed He did, as the opening Bible verse says.  Another verse assures us that “All things were created by Him, and for Him: and He is before all things, and by Him all things consist [subsist]". (Colossians 1:16-17).

You would find it interesting to study other tree frogs.  Almost without exception, they all have pretty patterns that only the Creator could design.

Love you all - Grandpa      

other Bible jewels can be found at
http://wordoftruth1.blogspot.com/

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